Chapter 5 MAZ
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Transcript Chapter 5 MAZ
Miles A. Zachary
MGT 4380
Business-level strategy address the question of how a
firm will compete in a specific industry
Developing business-level strategies requires not
being mesmerized by all the nuanced strategies of
firms in an industry
How can executives cut through the mess?
Generic Strategies-a general way of positioning a firm
within an industry
Best-known generic strategies developed by Michael
Porter of Harvard Business School
Two competitive dimensions
Competitive advantage
Involves whether a firm stresses lower costs or uniqueness
Scope of Operation
Determines whether a firm appeals to a general audience or a
focused subset of consumers
Four (4) traditional generic strategies
Cost leadership
Differentiation
Focused (niche) cost leadership
Focused (niche) differentiation
In addition to the four (4) main generic strategies, two
sub-strategies exist
Best-Cost Strategy
“Stuck-in-the-middle” Strategy
Different generic strategies offer different value
propositions to customers
They also have different value chain configurations
Cost leadership firms compete based on price and aim
for a broad target market
Sell goods for low prices
Target general consumers
Emphasize efficiency; spend little on advertising,
market research, or R&D
Often rely on economies of scale
Cost of offering goods decreases as a firm is able to sell
more items; expenses distributed across a greater
number of items
Ex.-Wal-Mart, Payless Shoe Source, etc.
Advantages
Low-cost providers better able to withstand price wars
Discourages new entrants
Advantage enhanced by high market share
Disadvantages
People perceive products and services as low-quality
High volume necessary because low profit margins
Need to focus on low cost blinds firms to subtle
environmental trends
Emphasis on efficiency makes it difficult to change
quickly when needed
Differentiators compete based on uniqueness and aim
at a broad target market
Attempt to convince customers to pay higher prices by
providing unique and desirable features
Emphasize that consumers “get what they pay for”
Firms must communicate to consumers why they
should pay higher prices—advertising!
Ex.-Nike, FedEx, Ralph Lauren, etc.
Advantages
Strong margins = firms need less customers to make a
profit
Enduring differentiator firms create strong brand
loyalty—less price sensitive
Difficult for new entrants to compete with brand loyalty
Disadvantages
Customers may not be willing to pay higher prices
Customers may prefer a cheaper alternative
Competitors may be able to imitate features such that
they are not sufficiently unique
A focused cost leadership strategy entails competing
based on price to target a narrow customer market
Not necessarily the lowest price in the industry; it
charges low prices relative to other firms that compete
within the target market
In other cases, the target market is defined by the sales
channel used to reach customers
Unique product distribution/retail
A focused differentiation strategy requires offering
unique features that fulfill the demands of a narrow
market
Similar to focused cost leadership strategy, focused
differentiation sometimes focus on a particular sales
channel
Others target particular demographic groups
Ex.-Whole Foods Market, Ferrari, etc.
Advantages
Higher prices can be charged
Firms can develop tremendous expertise in their specific
area
Disadvantages
Likely limited demand
Focused area may be taken over by other firms
Other firms may provide narrower focus
Firms pursuing best-cost strategies charge relatively
low prices AND offer substantial differentiation
For firms that want to have their cake and eat it too!
Very difficult to execute
Successful implementation can lead to a strong
competitive advantage
May face attacks from many different directions
Best-cost strategies can be easier to achieve if a firm
can lower their overhead/fixed costs
Ex.- Southwest Airlines, Target, Ikea, etc.
Some firms are unable to develop any specific generic
strategy
These firms become “stuck in the middle”
Non-unique products at higher-than-warranted prices
Firms fail when they try to please all consumers
Firms that are stuck in the middle are often put their
as a result of being out maneuvered by competitors
Ex.-Circuit City, Kmart, Blockbuster, Arby’s, etc.